Mass trapping Anthonomus rubi and Lygus rugulipennis in strawberries

Tuesday, November 18, 2014: 2:35 PM
Portland Ballroom 254 (Oregon Convention Center)
Lene Sigsgaard , Plant and Environmental Sciences, University of Copenhagen, Frederiksberg, Denmark
Nina Trandem , Bioforsk Plant health, Bioforsk, Ås, Norway
Michelle Fountain , East Malling Research, East Malling Research, Kent, United Kingdom
Anna-Karin Borg-Karlson , Department of Chemistry, KTH Royal Institute of Technology, Stockholm, Sweden
David Hall , Agriculture, Health & Environment Department, Natural Resources Institute, Kent, United Kingdom
Jerry Cross , East Malling Research, Kent, United Kingdom
Baiba Ralle , Latvian Plant Protection Research Centre, Latvian Plant Protection Research Centre, Riga, Latvia
Catherine Baroffio , Research Center Conthey, Agroscope, Conthey, Switzerland
Atle Wibe , Organic Food and Farming, Bioforsk, Tingvoll, Norway
The strawberry blossom weevil, Anthonomus rubi, and the European tarnished plant bug, Lygus rugulipennis, can cause substantial damage in organic strawberries in Northern and Central Europe. In conventional production it is also desirable to find alternatives to current pesticide controls, which negatively affects beneficials and also creates a risk of building pesticide resistance. Anthonomus rubi lays an egg in a developing flower bud and then partially bites off the flower stem, resulting in a loss of yield. Lygus rugulipennis nymphs and adults feed on flowers and developing fruitlets, causing a fruit distortion which makes the damaged fruit unmarketable. In the ERA-NET CORE Organic project “Softpest Multitrap”, we studied how pheromone and plant volatiles can be combined to improve trapping of the two pests. Our studies also included trap design and placement of traps in the field (grid size, perimeter versus field centre), investigations of the phenology of A. rubi and L. rugulipennis. In 2014 we assessed a ‘multi’-trap for both species. Results will be presented and discussed.